Guide price
£2,700,000Barn conversion for sale
Sheepstreet Lane, Etchingham, East Sussex
Featured
Barn conversion
90.99 acre(s)
Key information
Features and description
- Large converted barn
- Two semi detached cottages
- Collection of farm buildings
- Pasture
- Woods
- 91.56 acres
Situation
Kitchingham Farm is a traditional residential livestock farm located in the High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty in East Sussex. It has remained largely unchanged for more than 50 years whilst the style of farming has evolved over time. The land still supports livestock, but in more recent times has diversified by adding wine production in the form a vineyard first planted in 2021.
Sporting and recreation
The farm is located 1.6 miles from Etchingham which is an excellent place for families and young professionals, offering numerous recreational facilities, local amenities and providing a direct train service into Central London. The nearby historic village of Burwash provides a church, public houses and a range of village shops for a range of every day needs. The old market town of Heathfield is within easy reach with an excellent range of shops including two supermarkets, and the regional centre of Tunbridge Wells providing a vast range of amenities and shops is only 13 miles away.
There are wonderful walking routes in the area, together with nearby Ashdown Forest. Bedgebury Forest and its extensive network of riding routes is only a couple of miles away and within the forest is Bedgebury National Pinetum. Bewl Water Reservoir offers a wide range of activities including sailing, rowing, fishing and walking. The well renowned gardens of Sissinghurst, Great Dixter and Pashley Manor are all within easy reach and the everexpanding arrange of vineyards surround. The south coast and all it has to offer is just 20 miles to the south. There are a number of golf clubs nearby. The National Trust property of Batemants, the former home of Rudyard Kipling, is a short distance away.
Schools
There are a number of highly regarded state and private schools in the area including Marlborough House, and St Ronans in Hawkhurst and also Cranbrook Battle Abbey School, Benenden, Holmewood House and Vinehall are nearby.Further afield areTonbridge and Sevenoaks which are very well regarded.
History
Kitchingham farm was first mentioned in the Domesday Book in 1086 and was also listed as part of land acquired by Cardinal Wolsey in 1520 as part his acquisition of assets during the period where he was widely considered to be Britain’s richest man after King Henry VIII. Evidence exists of Kichingham’s use as an agricultural farm, in addition to being a site of iron extraction and smelting (c.14-18) and a hunting lodge (principally during Wolsey’s tenure). Revenues from the estate were recorded as being part of the foundation gift that set up Christ Church College, Oxford founded in 1525. Kitchingham was returned to private ownership following the dissolution of the monasteries and the sequestration of Wolsey’s assets after his execution in 1530. The Tudor oak framed farmhouse dates back to the 16th Century and is Grade II listed. Since coming into the current family’s ownership in 1976, Kitchingham has evolved from a mixed use farm (cattle, sheep, pigs and arable) into purely a sheep operation. In more recent years the current generation have embarked on a new venture building on the legacy of their tenure by planting a vineyard which is now in its third year of production.
Kitchingham Farm
Lot 2 – Kitchingham Barn, cottages, farm buildings and land Detached converted barn with two reception rooms, three bedrooms and large enclosed garden, pair of semi-detached cottages, range of traditional farm buildings, grassland, woodland.
About 90.99 acres (36.80 ha).
Kitchingham Barn
A Sussex barn that has been converted and is presented to an exceptionally high standard with large open plan living area with high vaulted ceilings and incorporating kitchen with electric Aga and companion, dining and seating areas. There is an off-lying office and a back room/utility area
with separate access to outside. Planning permission was granted for this conversion in 2002. Upstairs is an open galleried landing off which lies a large principal en-suite bedroom with laundry room off, and two additional bedrooms each with an additional room above offering opportunity for further sleeping accommodation, office or many other uses. The barn is surrounded by enclosed gardens with raised beds, orchard and lawn as well as a paved area directly outside the living room ideal for outdoor living. There is an outbuilding accessed from outwith the garden, and a small garden shed.
1 Kitchingham Farm Cottage
A three-bedroom semi-detached cottage of brick under a tile roof. A covered porch leads past a utility room into dining room with wood burner and off lying kitchen. Beyond the dining room is a spacious sitting room. Upstairs are three bedrooms and a bathroom. The cottage has a fenced, well-kept garden and parking. The cottage is occupied under a Rent (Agriculture) Act tenancy by the widow of a former farm worker.
2 Kitchingham Farm Cottage
A three-bedroom semi-detached cottage of brick under a tile roof. Passing a laundry room you enter the dining room with wood burner and off lying kitchen. Beyond the dining room is a spacious sitting room. Upstairs are three bedrooms and a bathroom. The cottage has a well-kept fenced garden rising to the rear with woodshed. There is a parking area. The cottage is subject to an Assured Shorthold tenancy.
Farm buildings
A range of farm buildings positioned around a concrete yard comprising:
1. A five-bay implement shed of steel stanchion construction beneath a corrugated fibre
cement roof.
2. A five-bay covered yard with lean-to and galvanised purlins, concrete block walling beneath
a corrugated fibre cement roof with chalk floor.
3. A hay barn by “Tyler” of concrete stanchion construction with a corrugated fibre cement roof.
4. A former piggery of timber construction under a fibre cement roof, in poor order.
5. A dung stead.
The farm buildings have electricity and water and are considered adaptable to a mixed farming enterprise.
Farmland
92 acres of grassland and woodland rises northwards from the farm buildings to the furthest point of Kitchingham Farm where there are exceptional views over the farm and beyond, over the High Weald. The farmland is fenced and is interspersed with small copses which would be suitable for the creation of a small family shoot. Permission has been granted for the right to cultivate 16.18 acres (6.55ha) acres of permanent pasture at the north eastern end of Lot 2. This area is shown hatched on the plan. Further detail is available from the vendor’s agent.
Method of sale: Kitchingham Farm is offered for sale as a whole, or in up to four lots by private treaty.
Services: The farm buildings have three phase electricity and water.
Private drainage: This complies with current regulations.
Wayleaves, easements and rights of way: The property is being sold subject to and with the benefit of all rights including; rights of way, whether public or private, light, support, drainage, water and electricity supplies and other rights and obligations, easements and quasi-easements and restrictive covenants and all existing and proposed wayleaves for masts, pylons, stays, cables, drains, water and gas and other pipes whether referred to in these particulars or not.
There is one bridleway over the land. Further details are available from the vendor’s agent.
Basic Payment: The entitlements to the Basic Payment are not included in the sale.
Schemes: The majority of the land at Kitchingham Farm is entered into an Entry Level Stewardship Scheme. Further details available from the vendor’s agent.
The purchaser will be deemed to have full knowledge of the scheme(s) and will take it on and comply with the scheme from completion if necessary. The vendor will retain any ELS/HLS payments payable up to completion. Further details are available from the vendor’s agent.
Designations: The Farm is set in the High Weald area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. It is also in a Nitrate Vulnerable Zone (NVZ).
Holdover: Holdover is reserved to permit the harvesting of grapes.
Early Entry: Early Entry may be permitted on to fields that have been harvested at the purchasers own risk following exchange of contracts. Further details are available from the vendor’s agent(s).
Sporting, timber and mineral rights:
All sporting timber and mineral rights are included in the freehold sale, in so far as they are owned.
Fixtures and fittings: All items usually regarded as tenant’s fixtures and fittings and equipment, including fitted carpets and curtains, together with garden ornaments and statuary, are specifically excluded from the sale. These may be available to the purchaser by separate negotiation.
Employees: There are no farm employees.
Local authority: Rother District Council
VAT: Any guide price quoted or discussed is exclusive of VAT. In the event that a sale of the property, or any part of it, or any right attached to it, becomes a chargeable supply for the purposes of VAT, such tax will be payable in addition.
Health and safety: Given the potential hazards of a working farm we ask you to be as vigilant as possible when making your inspection for your own personal safety, particularly around the farm buildings and machinery.
Solicitors: Gaby Hardwicke, 34 Wellington Square, Hastings, East Sussex, TN34 1PN
For the attention of: Jonathan Midgley Esq.[use Contact Agent Button]) [use Contact Agent Button]
Postcode: TN19 7AX (not reliable for satnav)
What3words:
///flagpole.commoners.quack
Directions
Follow the A21 south through Swiftsden and on to Hurst Green at which point turn right onto the A265 Station Road. After 0.3 miles turn right onto Burgh Hill and then right again onto Fysie Lane. Follow Fysie Lane until a slight right turn takes you onto Sheepstreet Lane.
Viewing
Strictly by confirmed appointment with the vendor’s agents, Strutt & Parker in London on[use Contact Agent Button] or Watsons in Heathfield on[use Contact Agent Button].
Kitchingham Farm is a traditional residential livestock farm located in the High Weald Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty in East Sussex. It has remained largely unchanged for more than 50 years whilst the style of farming has evolved over time. The land still supports livestock, but in more recent times has diversified by adding wine production in the form a vineyard first planted in 2021.
Sporting and recreation
The farm is located 1.6 miles from Etchingham which is an excellent place for families and young professionals, offering numerous recreational facilities, local amenities and providing a direct train service into Central London. The nearby historic village of Burwash provides a church, public houses and a range of village shops for a range of every day needs. The old market town of Heathfield is within easy reach with an excellent range of shops including two supermarkets, and the regional centre of Tunbridge Wells providing a vast range of amenities and shops is only 13 miles away.
There are wonderful walking routes in the area, together with nearby Ashdown Forest. Bedgebury Forest and its extensive network of riding routes is only a couple of miles away and within the forest is Bedgebury National Pinetum. Bewl Water Reservoir offers a wide range of activities including sailing, rowing, fishing and walking. The well renowned gardens of Sissinghurst, Great Dixter and Pashley Manor are all within easy reach and the everexpanding arrange of vineyards surround. The south coast and all it has to offer is just 20 miles to the south. There are a number of golf clubs nearby. The National Trust property of Batemants, the former home of Rudyard Kipling, is a short distance away.
Schools
There are a number of highly regarded state and private schools in the area including Marlborough House, and St Ronans in Hawkhurst and also Cranbrook Battle Abbey School, Benenden, Holmewood House and Vinehall are nearby.Further afield areTonbridge and Sevenoaks which are very well regarded.
History
Kitchingham farm was first mentioned in the Domesday Book in 1086 and was also listed as part of land acquired by Cardinal Wolsey in 1520 as part his acquisition of assets during the period where he was widely considered to be Britain’s richest man after King Henry VIII. Evidence exists of Kichingham’s use as an agricultural farm, in addition to being a site of iron extraction and smelting (c.14-18) and a hunting lodge (principally during Wolsey’s tenure). Revenues from the estate were recorded as being part of the foundation gift that set up Christ Church College, Oxford founded in 1525. Kitchingham was returned to private ownership following the dissolution of the monasteries and the sequestration of Wolsey’s assets after his execution in 1530. The Tudor oak framed farmhouse dates back to the 16th Century and is Grade II listed. Since coming into the current family’s ownership in 1976, Kitchingham has evolved from a mixed use farm (cattle, sheep, pigs and arable) into purely a sheep operation. In more recent years the current generation have embarked on a new venture building on the legacy of their tenure by planting a vineyard which is now in its third year of production.
Kitchingham Farm
Lot 2 – Kitchingham Barn, cottages, farm buildings and land Detached converted barn with two reception rooms, three bedrooms and large enclosed garden, pair of semi-detached cottages, range of traditional farm buildings, grassland, woodland.
About 90.99 acres (36.80 ha).
Kitchingham Barn
A Sussex barn that has been converted and is presented to an exceptionally high standard with large open plan living area with high vaulted ceilings and incorporating kitchen with electric Aga and companion, dining and seating areas. There is an off-lying office and a back room/utility area
with separate access to outside. Planning permission was granted for this conversion in 2002. Upstairs is an open galleried landing off which lies a large principal en-suite bedroom with laundry room off, and two additional bedrooms each with an additional room above offering opportunity for further sleeping accommodation, office or many other uses. The barn is surrounded by enclosed gardens with raised beds, orchard and lawn as well as a paved area directly outside the living room ideal for outdoor living. There is an outbuilding accessed from outwith the garden, and a small garden shed.
1 Kitchingham Farm Cottage
A three-bedroom semi-detached cottage of brick under a tile roof. A covered porch leads past a utility room into dining room with wood burner and off lying kitchen. Beyond the dining room is a spacious sitting room. Upstairs are three bedrooms and a bathroom. The cottage has a fenced, well-kept garden and parking. The cottage is occupied under a Rent (Agriculture) Act tenancy by the widow of a former farm worker.
2 Kitchingham Farm Cottage
A three-bedroom semi-detached cottage of brick under a tile roof. Passing a laundry room you enter the dining room with wood burner and off lying kitchen. Beyond the dining room is a spacious sitting room. Upstairs are three bedrooms and a bathroom. The cottage has a well-kept fenced garden rising to the rear with woodshed. There is a parking area. The cottage is subject to an Assured Shorthold tenancy.
Farm buildings
A range of farm buildings positioned around a concrete yard comprising:
1. A five-bay implement shed of steel stanchion construction beneath a corrugated fibre
cement roof.
2. A five-bay covered yard with lean-to and galvanised purlins, concrete block walling beneath
a corrugated fibre cement roof with chalk floor.
3. A hay barn by “Tyler” of concrete stanchion construction with a corrugated fibre cement roof.
4. A former piggery of timber construction under a fibre cement roof, in poor order.
5. A dung stead.
The farm buildings have electricity and water and are considered adaptable to a mixed farming enterprise.
Farmland
92 acres of grassland and woodland rises northwards from the farm buildings to the furthest point of Kitchingham Farm where there are exceptional views over the farm and beyond, over the High Weald. The farmland is fenced and is interspersed with small copses which would be suitable for the creation of a small family shoot. Permission has been granted for the right to cultivate 16.18 acres (6.55ha) acres of permanent pasture at the north eastern end of Lot 2. This area is shown hatched on the plan. Further detail is available from the vendor’s agent.
Method of sale: Kitchingham Farm is offered for sale as a whole, or in up to four lots by private treaty.
Services: The farm buildings have three phase electricity and water.
Private drainage: This complies with current regulations.
Wayleaves, easements and rights of way: The property is being sold subject to and with the benefit of all rights including; rights of way, whether public or private, light, support, drainage, water and electricity supplies and other rights and obligations, easements and quasi-easements and restrictive covenants and all existing and proposed wayleaves for masts, pylons, stays, cables, drains, water and gas and other pipes whether referred to in these particulars or not.
There is one bridleway over the land. Further details are available from the vendor’s agent.
Basic Payment: The entitlements to the Basic Payment are not included in the sale.
Schemes: The majority of the land at Kitchingham Farm is entered into an Entry Level Stewardship Scheme. Further details available from the vendor’s agent.
The purchaser will be deemed to have full knowledge of the scheme(s) and will take it on and comply with the scheme from completion if necessary. The vendor will retain any ELS/HLS payments payable up to completion. Further details are available from the vendor’s agent.
Designations: The Farm is set in the High Weald area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. It is also in a Nitrate Vulnerable Zone (NVZ).
Holdover: Holdover is reserved to permit the harvesting of grapes.
Early Entry: Early Entry may be permitted on to fields that have been harvested at the purchasers own risk following exchange of contracts. Further details are available from the vendor’s agent(s).
Sporting, timber and mineral rights:
All sporting timber and mineral rights are included in the freehold sale, in so far as they are owned.
Fixtures and fittings: All items usually regarded as tenant’s fixtures and fittings and equipment, including fitted carpets and curtains, together with garden ornaments and statuary, are specifically excluded from the sale. These may be available to the purchaser by separate negotiation.
Employees: There are no farm employees.
Local authority: Rother District Council
VAT: Any guide price quoted or discussed is exclusive of VAT. In the event that a sale of the property, or any part of it, or any right attached to it, becomes a chargeable supply for the purposes of VAT, such tax will be payable in addition.
Health and safety: Given the potential hazards of a working farm we ask you to be as vigilant as possible when making your inspection for your own personal safety, particularly around the farm buildings and machinery.
Solicitors: Gaby Hardwicke, 34 Wellington Square, Hastings, East Sussex, TN34 1PN
For the attention of: Jonathan Midgley Esq.[use Contact Agent Button]) [use Contact Agent Button]
Postcode: TN19 7AX (not reliable for satnav)
What3words:
///flagpole.commoners.quack
Directions
Follow the A21 south through Swiftsden and on to Hurst Green at which point turn right onto the A265 Station Road. After 0.3 miles turn right onto Burgh Hill and then right again onto Fysie Lane. Follow Fysie Lane until a slight right turn takes you onto Sheepstreet Lane.
Viewing
Strictly by confirmed appointment with the vendor’s agents, Strutt & Parker in London on[use Contact Agent Button] or Watsons in Heathfield on[use Contact Agent Button].
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